AI Article Synopsis

  • Individuals of both sexes can employ different reproductive strategies, but research on how they interact in breeding has been limited.
  • In prairie voles, resident females are more likely to mate with their paired, territorial males rather than wandering males.
  • The study found that while mating patterns varied depending on the female's reproductive strategy, there was no significant increase in multiple paternity for females without a social partner.

Article Abstract

Individuals of either sex may display alternative behaviors to obtain copulations, but few studies have examined the breeding patterns of females and males in populations where individuals of both sexes exhibit alternative reproductive tactics (ARTs). In prairie voles (), most adults are territorial, residing at a single nest site either as male-female pairs or as solitary individuals. However, some adults adopt nonterritorial, wandering tactics. During two field seasons monitoring prairie vole populations maintained in seminatural enclosures, we found evidence that females exhibiting different ARTs bred differentially with resident and wandering males. Females residing at a nest with a male bred significantly more often with a paired resident male, primarily their social partner, and significantly less often with male wanderers compared to single resident females or wandering females. These patterns were not due to chance, because paired resident females produced offspring with paired resident males significantly more than expected based on the relative abundance of these males in the population, whereas single resident females produced offspring with male wanderers significantly more than expected based on the proportion of male wanderers in the population. We did not find any evidence that multiple paternity was greater in the litters of single resident females and wanderer females even though these females lacked a male social partner to limit mating access by multiple males. This suggests that mate guarding by a female's male social partner was not the primary determinant of multiple paternity in the litters of females exhibiting different reproductive tactics. However, male ART did affect the likelihood of multiple paternity. Females that produced offspring with single resident or wanderer males had an increased likelihood of multiple paternity relative to females producing offspring with paired resident males. The results of this study show that female and male ARTs can affect breeding patterns.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7566745PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/jmammal/gyaa058DOI Listing

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